Political blog KeithHennessey.com recently  published an in-depth analysis on understanding the House Democrats’  new health care bill. I’ve included a clip from the article below,  but be sure to check out his full post here. 
Yesterday I posted and described the  draft Kennedy-Dodd health care bill.  Today I would like to do  the same for an outline produced by House Democrats.
 
Here is a three-page outline of “Key  Features of the Tri-Committee Health Reform Draft Proposal in the House  of Representatives,” dated yesterday (June 8, 2009).
 
The three committees are:
 
The House Ways & Means Committee,  chaired by Rep. Charlie Rangel (D-NY).  The Health Subcommittee  is chaired by Rep. Pete Stark (D-CA).
The House Energy & Commerce Committee,  chaired by Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA).  The Health Subcommittee is  chaired by Rep. Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ).
The House Committee on Education &  Labor, chaired by Rep. George Miller (D-CA).  The Health, Employment,  Labor and Pensions Subcommittee is chaired by Rep. Robert Andrews (D-NJ).
 
The document suggests this is a joint  product of the three committees and/or their subcommittees.  My  sense, however, is that it is Speaker Pelosi who is driving the bus.   This is in contrast to the Senate, where the committee chairmen (Kennedy/Dodd  and Baucus) appear to have the pen, in less well-coordinated efforts.
 
Kennedy-Dodd and the House bill outline  are remarkably similar.  Whether this represents House-Senate coordination  or parallel thought processes is unclear.
I think the easiest way for me to present  the House bill outline is in comparison with the Kennedy-Dodd bill.   So here my description from yesterday of the Kennedy-Dodd bill, with  today’s comparison to the House bill outline in red.  I hope  it’s comprehensible and useful this way.  If you read yesterday’s  post, you can skim the text in black and focus on the new text in blue.
 
Here are 15 things to know about the  draft Kennedy-Dodd health bill and the House bill outline.
 
1. The Kennedy-Dodd bill would create  an individual mandate requiring you to buy a “qualified” health  insurance plan, as defined by the government.  If you don’t have  “qualified” health insurance for a given month, you will pay a new  Federal tax.  Incredibly, the amount and structure of this new  tax is left to the discretion of the Secretaries of Treasury and Health  and Human Services (HHS), whose only guidance is “to establish the  minimum practicable amount that can accomplish the goal of enhancing  participation in qualifying coverage (as so defined).”  The new  Medical Advisory Council (see #3D) could exempt classes of people from  this new tax.  To avoid this tax, you would have to report your  health insurance information for each month of the prior year to the  Secretary of HHS, along with “any such other information as the Secretary  may prescribe.”
The House bill also contains an individual  mandate.  The outline is less specific but parallel:  “Once  market reforms and affordability credits are in effect to ensure access  and affordability, individuals are responsible for having health insurance  with an exception in cases of hardship.”
2. The Kennedy-Dodd bill would also create  an employer mandate.  Employers would have to offer insurance to  their employees.  Employers would have to pay at least a certain  percentage (TBD) of the premium, and at least a certain dollar amount  (TBD).  Any employer that did not would pay a new tax.  Again,  the amount and structure of the tax is left to the discretion of the  Secretaries of Treasury and HHS.  Small employers (TBD) would be  exempt.
The House bill outline also contains  an employer mandate that appears to parallel that in Kennedy-Dodd:   “Employers choose between providing coverage for their workers or  contributing funds on behalf of their uncovered workers.”
 
